Newspaper Page Text
Cljp^ontljfniivPforkr
Improved Bam Yard Fowls.
Umler this head, Mr. Lee asks for ;
loimation as to crossing, &e., {>.
that would (tvlight the eve of even!2lS, of the January number of The
pile it up in a large pile and let it: over thousands o! acres of crops in!
alone until r< quiied lo~ use. I find process ot harvesting, in the i
that corn stalks, shucks, straw (ir ! a, "< P'^iar. province of j
, • , .. , . , . ] baxony, a region for the most part 1 mloimauon as to crossing, ice., p.
any kind ol rough material, can be j , hal Wolll( , (klight lho evp of e ‘ ven ; 2l S, of the January number " rp — '
perfectly rotted and decomposed in | American farmer, lying as level | IIuual Carolinian. The
the space of sixty days, when prop- and mellow 10 the plow ns the gen- which hr- speaks of as Inn ing made i
t rly mixed with the stable manure | tie rolling billows of Illinois. Oilt u, i between the game and light Brahma,
and have attention paid to throwing
the heap over at the proper time.
H. & J. WEED,
IMPORTERS AND
W II O L E $ A L E D E A L E It S
LEGAL ADVEHf i-| WENT
Mifrill'
1 N
JJtjriruUural department
From the Times and Planter.
Editor Times and Planter:
1 enclose a letterfrom my old friend,
Wm. Barnes, of Milledgeville. It
has some valuable facts, and is sug
gestive in several directions. Please
publish. \ours,
DAVID W. LEWIS.
as far as the eve could reach on ei- i is preliy good, and has often been
! thef side of the railroad, stretched j resorted to here, not only with that,
' one cultivated expanse, unmarred but. other large breeds. The ilis- j
I notice that many learned men, fences, but checkered all over similarity of ihe two, however, is so j
recommend that coarse manures i with infinite interchange of crops, j great—one being very large and the I
pay best to pul them upon ibe land j scan ely any one field of one ci op j other of a medium or rather small |
Iron, Steel, Tin Plate and Hardware, Rub
ber Belting and Carriage Material-
Sft.
tJS iSl rrs Bp^onq/itoiL
arid plow them under, uiy expyil- <» or ^ than one ..r two acres
in extent. Yet in all these thou
sands of ‘floors’ (certainly here a
field is a ‘floor’) not a mowing
or reaping machine ot horserake
was to be seen. Every swath had
been haggled off and tumbled to-
Milledgeville, Ga.,
.March 9, 1872.
D. W. Lewis : Dear Sir: Your
favor of 22d ult., came duly to hand.
Carrington had spoken to me in re
gard to the Millett seed. I did not
raise but little last season. I gave
him some of two kinds to send to you,
which I trust you have received ere
this. I gave him about half that I
had. I should have been pleased if
ence leaches me otherwise. In the
first place it takes as long to haul
out hall decayed material as
that which is fully rotten; when
the material is once in a sit
uation to lake up a substance
which will fertilize the land, let it, !ected U1 , }) a puttering hand rake,
have a chance to do all that it can. | every sheaf of grain bound bv a wo
lf ihe matter has been plowed often : man's arms, and when ihe crop had
(while in the lot) it w ill go on decay- j finally gone off upon wheelbarrows
i.i „ |- , * |, lr , m or drawn bv harnessed cows, the
mg and taking up the liquids from ; . , - .. ... ’. .
, . , l serried rows of stubble exposed the
the lot untn it becomes fully decay- anti q uil y ol lhe ,„ ow . r’s tools, and
ed and lull ol rich plant food, then j |,j s ur ) ier unskilfulness in using even
and plow it'those. Imagine a scythe only three
of drinking up | feet in length, lour inches broad at
the heel, fixed in a strait snath, and
size—this cross is not so happy aj
one as that between the Dorking and j
the Brahmas of different colors, j
v* fiether light, datk. or partridge, or
with the bull*cochin.
The Dorking is the most perfect
and best table fowl of all others., and
oct 10 1*71 r *■ u (ini.
SAVANNAH, GA.
gether by if e old fashioned scythe, j has been long so esteemed in Great
every winrow of hay had been col- Britain. I was the first to import
carry it out, spread it
under, and instead
all the moisture that comes in
up
its
, , , , , .. . , a hand-rake with a young sapling
reach ll,rough the year to adjust il | slri ,,,,ed of i|3 bark f or a ° ha | ld |®
and you have specimens of the out
fit of a German haymaker.
I could have supplied you with ai( Ure ( 0 f' ce( | whatever may be plant
peck or more. Last year was a bad ■ e( j uver
in going on to decay, il will be ready
with the moisture it has within itsell
4j begin at once to throw ofFamofs-
Power of the Soil to Eetain Manures,
Few cultivators of the soil seem
to be fully aware of the wonderful
[tower of even a loose and light soil
to retain plant food tlat has been
artificially applied. I found a strik
ing instance of it a few years since.
The place on which I settled some
thirty years ago was new fresh land,
save some ten or twenty acres which
, PI • T i ii i i . r * - - had been partially cleared and cul-
This season, I shall only plant for t c h anCe o, gettiitg away, it is obliged livale j. This had been nearly ex
forage, and seed. 1 he German J to g Q un ,l.. r the barn. I hausled by injudicious culture, but
Millet is about equal to the Chinee ! Now , wi || tell you about my mode j as the labor of clearing new land „ d jf we „ fe( ,
fee<1 ' bo11 ' 8 row «Hly upon Lf ra i s i„g hay. I have some bottom "; a * gr ,7 me '. ,e “’ 1 P 1 * 0 ^' 1 ll ’?'.n>w ucarly one pound per month
and hardly repaid for the planting
season for the Millet, it did not ma
ture well, or yield well of seeds.
The land upon which 1 grew -50
gallons, I could have made a bale
of cotton. As no other person rais
ed the Millet, the loose negroes
gathered heavily of the larger stalks.
My cow, hogs and sheep manure
is kept ail under cover, the urine
from all the stock lodges upon the
manure under cover, and in case a
heavy rain should fall, that might
possibly leach through the stable
compost heap, the liquid has no
them into this country, which I did !
in the year 1641, and my brother^
Mr. L F. Alien of Buffalo, New
York, still keeps up the descendants
of this importation, and no one is
more successful than he is in taking
prizes on this breed at the poultry
shows, notwithstanding the nutner
ous fine importations which have
been made since.
The meat of the Brahma, pure, is
rather coarse and stringy; liiatot the
Dorking, fine, juicy, and lender.—
The Dorking is almost as large as
the Brahma, and in much belter;
shape, having a long body something j
like the Rouen duck, but rounder, ,
and remarkably full in the bieast,
which is the most valuable point of
a fowl. The Brahma is fullei in the
rump and broader rather on the back.
I have seen crosses of the two which
united their good points; but these
cannot always be depended on. At
present, for a table fowl, this is the
most popular cross among us; and
Dorking cocks are now in great de
mand for this purpose.
Chickens of this cross are not so
long-legged as the Brahmas, espe
W. A. HOPSON & CO.,
Have received this day a choice variety
the Latest styles of
LADIES’, MISSES’ AND CHILDREN'S SUITS.
of
AND
ALSO
SWISS OVERSKIRTS. DRESSING SKIRTS,
CORSET COVERS, PIQUE WRAPPERS,
ALSO
A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
Ladies’ XIiiderg-arments.
W- A- HOPSON & CO, 4l Second St., 20 Triangular
Block, Macon, Ga.
Laurens
W ILL be sold
in lLili.in. at i>ub;i
Tuesday iii April next, j,j: , ,
of oitr l.<r. r ,
(•21.0) b'tsbei; •
■James it. Lamb. hi s u-tv 01
Laurens Superior Cnn-t, jj,.
■lames M Lamb. Pr .pert »■ 1
said ti ta.
Dublin, Ga., March -rh t-7[
GEO. CL’UR
marc It 12 tJs.
JLaureus tShoriil
ILL be sold bulor,: the C
in the town of Dublin
1‘iiesday in April nest, within
of sale, one tract of land on ihe
Oconee River, ccutv.ning oi.
1 three (1UJ) acres, inure or
lands of Geo Kim, and otic
Cross Reads, known as the
Lewis C. Beachim now lives
•‘he property ot Lewis BeacLa:
j ti fa from Laurens Snpetb.r
J Wilkes, administrator, aini J,
| ministratrix, vs. Lewis Be ...
pointed out by Joitu Rivers,
ney.
Dublin, G i. March t. I-7i
GEORGEC
niar'i-tds Printer’s fee $2 ov
Sa
Re’c. 71 Fel>. 14.1 R
3. A.
Hollingsworlh Block,
MEGMATH,
MA.COJST, GrA..
CAN SUPPLY YOU ALL WITH
CORK,
BACON,
LAUD,
FLOUR,
MEAL,
KILL,
SUGAR
COFFEE,
SYRUP,
MOLASSES,
TOBACCO,
WHISKY,
Mv Terms are Cash, or such Paper as can be used lo raise Cash and
I will Sell you as h w us anybody.
N. A. MEGRATH, Macon, Ga.
rJnoefi, 1871. IDSi 4 2‘2 ly
very rich land,and can bf 1 cut about j j an j t j, al j s ra ^|j e r wet for corn or
the 10th of June, for green forage. L ollon . can > L be drained. I sow
As you are connected with the lhese ; aIU , 3 in oat3 an J. ; manure
Agricultural Society of our Slate, I! tbcin wel |. ] i )ave rye now twr Ivc
will presume upon your patience inches , |igilj w}jich f am f CC(J j tlg to
with a few remarks. 1 partially slQck< Wheil I cut off'the grain in
and culture. 1 noticed there was
about half an acre on a steep hill
side which produced well.
I cultivated
entered the tilling of the soil in IS62.
I had a barn built, something alter
the order of such buildings in the
Northern Stales. This building is
50 feel long, by thirty wide, hav
ing a cellar under it. Being
built upon a side bill, excavation
was easy. The top soil was taken
out, thrown aside for to be used
with the manure, &c. There being
June, l take my wagon and haul
and spread from fifteen to 25 loads
of well rotted manure, then lake a
years and that hillside always pro
duced well. A stranger, passing
one day, stopped anil inquired who
lived here, and remarked that he
settled this place twenty years ago,
i • , i .... i i,„ j but that losing his wife, he became
heavy mm tooth harrow and harrow .. , e . , . . .
, . . discouraged and sold out. As he
me land both vvays-scratch ,1 ever j wa3 a |^, u t leaving. 1 asked him what
well—roll il over lo make ll level a: , be bad t |,, aa ,t,at hillside to make
the floor. The crab-grass and crow- it produce so much belter than the
foot'springs up as thick as grass can other land, when it looked poorer
grow, and when il is ir: bloom, about | ant ^ u ' ore hairen. He replied that
. . t- . i-Li i there lie had ins cowpen. It hail
the middle ot August or first of feep- j lwon , r<anri aill _ {l i a lro j t!le
till seven months old. This gives a
fowl of good size for the table at three
to four months age.
The South has a great advantage
,i-, . r . | over us here at the North, in raising
tins land lor sever,! , , . ,
poul.ry, as their hen3 may lay all
winter, while we get few eggs du
ring this time, unless we resort to hot
You can
OUR STOCK OF
earth. 1 have been able to make
three tons of good hay to the acre,
and sometimes even four tons—and
its hay ! I cut of a morning until 10
o’clock, and at 2 o’clock ruke up
and put into cocks of about 100 lbs
Il is now thirty two years since
that piece of land was cow penned,
and il shows a marked difference in
its products from the soil around it.
1 am often asked : ‘Is guano any
benefit the second year?’ I answer
unhesitatingly that it is. Two year:
Next morning, as soon as the dew is j a {?° ^ planted a piece ol land in su-
a . • ■ ~ , , i ,, | gar cane and manured heavily with
off, it is opened tor two horns, then 6 . . . ,, , , J P
1 . guano in the drill. 1 made a fine
put upon the wagon and put m 'he ‘ p 0 ( catie , an d in the fall planted
barn; a little salt is thrown over it, H[ ie same piece of land in wheat
and it looks green and keeps so all without manure. As the wheat
the time until used. 1 have now a grew, the rows where the cane was
large quantity green as the day il 1 showed a -narked ti.ffereiioe
was cut. All kinds ol stock eat ii
readily—keep fat upon it.
Grass cul after frost don't make huy
over the other portions, of the field,
and the yield was double.
Two years ago I planted a field
in Norway oats, using guano and
The Lepsedisa Clover glows on [ b° ne dust; first year 1 planted the
rich land 12 or 16 inch's high. J j field in coicon, usmg two hon ;
dred pounds ot Uacihc guano and
cul about a ton of it last season; it is
tather woody, but slock eat il readi
ly when moistened with a little salt
water.
Last year, 1 obtained corn from
seven States. 1 found the Penn corn
yielded best. Upon rich land, 3x3
feet, one stalk gave invariably two
good ears, often three.
The New Jersey suckering is ra
ther an all-rounder, and makes ma
ny ears upon suckers, but the wevil
takes to it.
I had the satisfaction of raising a
bale of cotton (-135 lbs.) upon three
quarters of an acre of land-, upon
which twelve loads of my wdl rotted
stable manure was drilled, hoping
to do better this year.
I presume it you have deciphered
all the above, that you will come to
the wise conclusion that you have
been bored Ions enough.
I remain truly yours,
WM. BARNES.
To D. W. Lewis, Sparta, Ga.
German and American Farming.
A correspondent of the Spring
field Republican, writing from Dres
den, suggests some interesting com
parisons between German and Anie;-
ican farming:
The Saxon farmers, however, nev
er ask whether farming pays. They
maintain a slow, but sure prosperity,
and during the last third nf a centu
ry have advanced the rate of pro
duction proportionately with an in
crease of nearly fifty per cent, in
population. This advance has not
been through the American aveuue
of introducing new methods, but,
probably, by a closer and more des
perate forcing of the old and settled
methods of farming.
The railway recently took me
twelve brivk pillows six feet in ihe j itag^nd ; 1^ '^“'booked, i,
ground, which gives ample room for my scyt j le cul3 within an inch of the produced well,
a large cellar, which will hold two ^ ~
hundred loads of manure, all secur
ed from bad weather.
The first floor is divided off into
stalls for mules, cattle, feed room,
buggy and gear room &c,, a3 fol
lows: Upon the West end, there is
four stalls for stock, giving each five
feet in width, by nine in length. In
the centre l have a drive way of
eleven feet, with large doors opening
the full wedth, admitting a loaded
wagon. Upon the East end, in front,
1 have my buggy room, lor gear
&t\, which is 18 by 18 feet, back of
this room is sit Bated my cow stalls,
18 by 12 feet, the stanchions are of
old fashion, and the cows are put up
by their necks, standing side by side,
each having a space of three feet for
their feed trough; the 16 feet gives
me room tor six cows.
They are bedded every day with
eaves and top soil, and every morn
ing all the manure is droped through
a trap door, into the cellar. below ?
and a few grains ol corn is also
thrown down and the hogs compost
the manure daily.
The mules are facing the drive
way, and are fed from the open
space giving them free air.
The 2nd story contains a large a-
mouut of room; over the buggy and
cow rooms, there are two rooms 18
by 15 feet, seven feet joist for corn,
cotton or gtain of any kind, into
which a wagon can be unloaded
from the barn floor or drive way.
Over the mules there being a scaf
fold or room for hay,-which reaches
to the lop of the barn, and is about
fiitcen feet, and will hold about eight
tons of hay. Over the drive way,
and the corn and cotton rooms as
mentioned, there is a space for fod
der, which is 30 by 30 feet, and a
height of ten leet in centre, runing
down to the eves. This space will*
hold 8,000 bundles ol fodder.
I have ample room for all the ma-
nuie that can be made upon my
place, under my barn, but my ex
perience has convinced me that sta
ble or horse manure should have a
quantity of moisture, consequently,
1 put mine all out in the lot near the
door, and compost il with top soil,
chip dirt &c., heaping it up in a
large heap to heat and decay as
fast as possible, I have it looked
over often until fully rotten, then
Foreign
and Domestic Dry Goods,
ITJL Will be sold l>rf„
door in Mt. Vernon within t ; e
sale, on the drst Tuesday i-. j; :: .
land No. two hundred and
10th district of said county, s M
eriy of James Yeomans to sati.-f.
Court fi fa's issued from the :; i
.VI in said county, in favor f i
v*. said James Yeomans. Prop
out by defendant. Tern s rash',
and returned to me by a coastal
MARTIN COLEY, ^
mar5-td«.
O r KOKGtA Laurens Count -
I Court ot Ordinary.
William Dixon having filed 1
j for letters of Guaidianship u W'a
| and Gray, orphans of J, u
| deceased.
These are to cite and admoi-.M
' of kin and person concerned . > 1
at the regular term of this Court
to show cause if any they can «h
j shall not he granted,
i Given under nry hand and i frk
j this February 17th, 1-7
J. B. WOLFE
Feb. 27, 72.
» KOtttilA La„rei:s Courtry.'
T Court ot Ordinary,
j Hardy Gray having tiled hi-
; letters of administration cn tie »‘
j Gray, late of said county dei-easr
These are to cite and adn onisb
\ gular, the ni-xt of kin and ere
I deceased, to he and appear at
; of this court in April next, lu
j any they can, why said apple L
| he granted.
Given under my hand and utr,
this February 20th. 1-72.
J. B WOLFE,
| Feb. 27, 72.
'i EOKGIA LAi;RE N CUi
NOTIONS, ETC, ETC
boue dust. Last year the same field
was planted in cotton, using two
hundred pounds of Pacific guano to
the acre; but from some cause which
I cannot comprehend, the ciop was done on pasture. On one-eighth of
a short one. This season I planted I an acre I have raised one hundred
the same field in my prolific corn, laud fifty bushels ot sugar beets and
without manure of anv kind, and | carrots, which with the two tons of
houses and artificial heat,
also hatch your chickens two lo three
months earlier than we do; and,
again, two months later in the sum
mer or autumn. A fanner there may
thus easily keep his household sup
plied with fresh eggs and meat the
whole year round ; and these, under
favorable circumstances, are as
cheap meat as he can raise ; for eggs
may count in part as an equivalent!
for meat.
With fresh poultry, eggs, milk,
butter and cheese, a former will nev
er want for wholesome, and I will
add, a luxurious meal, although he
may have no other grain and vege
table in the house than Indian corn
and sweet potatoes.—Rural CurolG
nian.
How Little Land will Keep a
Cow.—On the first day of June last,
writes a correspondent, I commenced
cutting clover for one cow confined
in a yard enclosed by a high, tighi
board fence, v^ith a stable attached,
in which she had been led. She had
no feed hut fresh clover, from (he 1st
olJuuelothe 15th of October, and
all taken from one-fourth of an acre
ol ground. She has averaged eigh
teen quarts of strained milk per day,
from which my wife has made eight
pounds of butter per week, during
the fourand a half months. The cow i
is five years old, and across of the
Ayershire and Durham. She has
given more milk, more butler and of
abetter quality, than she has ever
G
Whereas Edward Peri
j Thomas Lock, reyiv-cnt:
i petition duly filed and eni
j he ha< fully administered
I _ . tate. Tliis is therefore to
o NOW full ar.d complete. YV e have the largest and most variedjsfockwe have ever exhibit : cerne d, kindred ana
ed to the trade. Dress Goods Department Farticulurly Attractive, ami Prices Lots.
Our Motto is,
‘‘Short Profits and Quick Sal s.”
And wo feel confident of giving satisfaction to ail u iio may favor us with iheir’patronage.
We respectfully invite the public to call and examine our stock
W. A., Banks Sous,
43 Second Street, Tnungular Block, AlACON, GA.
r March 21, 1871 ll |y.
| any they can why said admiuistut
not be discharged from li- ?.ci.:7
and receive letters of dismission
Monday in July 1S72. J B \\
Dec 19 6m.
CLOT
A G
-:o:—
\Ve invite the Public along the NEW LINE ol RAltfROAD through
BALDWIN and HANCOCK Counties, to call and examine our new
SPRING STOCK OF
Readymade Clothing,
AND
Gents’ Furnishing Goods.
We keep the best of every thing in our line, ar.d willjre surelo please
vou if vou will give us a trial.
ADM t:\ISTKATOi
W ILL be sold before
SAL!
door in Dublin, Laurr-ns C
first Tui-sday in Apul next, wit
hours of sale, three lots of land in
known as the lare residence of >'
dec’d. The property of »he esl
Burch, and s dd for cLtril ufi ri
an order of the Court ofOrdinar-
ty Terms of r-ale—Cash.
This February 9th, 1K72.
WILLIAM 1
febtJ-tds Aoin’r Sr
.AU!
[eVl
R March
187J.
VVINSHIP & CALLAWAY, Macon, Ga
11 ly
Dickson Compound
the yield has been such as to satis
fy me that the soil bad retained a
good portion of ihe plant food con
tained in (he guano, and that the
corn got the benefit of it. This field
produced, on an average, thirty
bushels to ihe ace. There may be
something in the variety of corn, but
not ajd ; on other fields that had not
been previously guanoed the yield
was not more than half.
Thus it is very plain ro see that
tianures, judiciously applied, arc
not exhausted by the first crop, nor
do the rains wash them away or
leach them through. li the rain wash
the fertilizing properties of the soil
away, the earth would have long ago
been a barren waste. It is bad cul-
lute that wastes the soil, hot plants.
This I am satisfied of by many
years of practical experiment. I
have been thirty-two years cultivat
ing the piny woods land i live on,
and it produces belter this year than
the first year I planted it.
Cor. Rural Carolinian.
Remedy fon Sjob Shovldbus.—
Wash them well every night and
morning with a strong solution of oak
bark, made by boiling the baik in
water, then rub them well w ith liu-
fiay, will keep her handsomely the
balance of the year. The labor ol
cutting clover for the cow is less
than driving her three-fourths of a
mile to pasture. In the dairy dis
tricts, the usual estimate is four
acies lo the cow, on the hay and
pasture system ; Whereas by soil
ing ami raising toots five-eights of
an acre is found lo be sufficient. I
will state further, what ( believe from
nearly thirty years experience is, that
there is no crop so valuable for soil
mg as clover,. no crop so many
pounds of which, and of equal value
tor milk and butler, can be produced
from an qce of ground. Sweet corn
is a good crop for late feeding, where
clover will not grow, but not profita
ble for winter feeding.
A new mill or machine for manu
facturing flour from grain without
mill-stones has lately been put into
operation in Edinburgh, and is con
sidered by competent authorities as
one of the most important inventions
of the present day. This mill re
duces the grain to Hour by percussion,
while it is unsupported, and falling
freely or being projected through the
air. The wheat in passing through
the machine is struck by a series of J
bars moving at an immense speed in
seed oil. Annoint them every night j opposite directions;.it is thus install-
and morning with a salve made of, taneously reducerl to a state ready for
three parts of linseed oil and one bolting, no injurious heat being caus-
C0/V7 P/
Prepared by the Dickson Fertilizer Company,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,
For Colton and Corn. Small grain and Grasses.
ALSO,
PURE FINE BONE DUST.
BONE MEAL, fbr CAiTTLK and POULTRY.
SUPERPHOSPHATES ol the best grade.
SULPHATE AMMONIA, SULPHURIC ACID,; and other Fertilizing
Elements ot prime quality.
JAMES T. GARDINER, Presiilml.
L. L. LAMAR, Agent., Sparta, Ga.
R. N. LAMAR, Agent., Milledgeville, Ga.
Dec. lGtli# 1871. p&r 3m.
part quicklime. To make horses’
shoulders lough, wash the shoulders
well twice a day, for a week bi fore
working, with the oak baik solution.
—Exchange. [The best we have
tried is a saturated solution of alum
in whisky.]—Southern Farmer,
ed, and the flour produced is of much
superior quality lo that obtained by
ordinary grinding, while the cost of
its production is considerably less.
The machine in operation in Edin
burgh realizes, it is said, all the ad
vantages claimed for it.
OLIVER, DOUGLASS & CO.,
Wholesale Manufacturers of Tinwa e,
DEALERS IN
Stoves, Sheet Ir.ui, Block Tin, Tiu Plate, A'e.,
4S THIRD STREET, MACOKT OA.
Stove Emporium. S
TWENTY different* patterns of Cooking Stoves. Stewart’s Great Benefactor, Improved
ron Witcli, Palmetto, and olhern patterns, all guaranteed. Box and office Stoves. Grates
om $>5 to $J0. Hotloware, S;id Irons, Fire Dogs, and an assortment of Shovels and Tones
Pocket and Table Cuttlery, Hardware. Full line of House Furnishing Goods, Wood ai d
Willow Ware, Looking Glasses, pressed .and plain Tiu Ware to the trade All orders promptly
attended to. rNov, 21 187J.tf.
J. ITiira PnwrS.t.r, R H. ScHotauj.' c
OetL. Xz’ti, SacFraaciseo C»!. t mnDJanD* C ^
MILLIONS Bear TeslimoM
Wouderfnl Curative Efff ‘
They are not a vile Fancy Drink. J-
Rum, Wblakey, ProoISpirit* aailK ‘'J
nil ora doctored, epiced and iweetei;eJi
called “Tonics,” “Appetizers,” “Heir:
iead the tippler on to drunkenness and ru.
.Medicine.made from the Native Bootss):
fornia, free from oil Alcoholic
They are the GREAT BI.OOO PI BIF^
A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE. -
vator and Invigorator ot t’no System, cat ,
poisonous matter and restoring the blood ta : -
dicion. No person can take these Hitters £ -
direction* and remain long Kntvel!.provide; j
are not destroyed by mineral poison or ; .
and the vital organs wasted beyond the ;
Tbey are a Gentle Purgative ns
Tonic, possessing, also, the peculiar merit
a powerful aret.t in relieving Congestion oil
of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs-
FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS,
old, married or single, at the dawn o£ •.voir-■;
the tnm of life, these Tonic Bitters have n J r-j-
For Inflammatory and Chronic**'!
: tlsm and Gout, Dyspepsia or I udigc* n ‘T
| ioua, Remittent and IntciinitteEi 1
Diseases of the Blocd, Liver,
j Bladder, thsse Bitters have beenrao»- -
] Such Diseases are caused by Vitiate
| which is generally produced by derargem-
! eestive Organs. a
i DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTI0.;-
! l’aiu in the Shoulders.Coutks. Tightnco ^
! Dizziness, Soar Eructations of tin Stea*-- _
J in the Mouth. Bilious Attacks. ■
I ! Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain — ::
Kidneys, and a hundred otharpainful sy-.
offsprings of Dyspepaia.
They invigorate the Stomach and sti**
Liver and Bowels, which render them r
cscy ia ele*:iains the blood of ad iaper—-
i ing new life snd visor to the wboiesp
; FOR SKIN DISEASES
) Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimple', v- *
I buncles, King-Worm*, Scald Head,
Itch. Scarfs, Diacolorations of the It
• eases of the Skin, of whatever uatne or ^
! dag up and carried oat of the * T5:cc
i the uaeol these Bitiers. One b° ; ‘
j convince the most incredulous oftne--
; Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when'"- -I
* purities bursting throveh the ski. -
. tioas or Sore*; cleanat ; when yo a n ‘J..
I sluggish in the veins; clean'e ***
! your feelings will tellyouwhcn.
1 and the health of the system wh. v *
l’in. Tape, and other " or “ t „.
j system of so many thousands, ate
shed l
the
! and removed. Says P distingnt
. is scarcely an individual >
whose body is exempt from ir« f
I is not upon the healthy elements
worms exist, but upon the
deposits that breed these hvina u
System of Medicine, no vermin*- ,,,
will free the system from « ljrE
J. WALKER, Proprietor. R-
D-’egists and Hen. Agents. '■
"*and 35 and 3A Coratner.
«“SOLD BY ALL PBtlHH-
Fo.- Sale b y JOHN M CLAKk;
PULASKI H0« !
Savannah, Ga
W. II. WILTBERG £i? « Fn? *